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Postage stamps and postal history of Argentina : ウィキペディア英語版
Postage stamps and postal history of Argentina

Argentine postage stamps were first issued in 1858 by the Argentine Confederation and nationally by the new Republic's National Postal Service in 1862. Due to the continuing civil wars, a number of provinces and territories, particularly in the then-remote far north and far south, continued to issue their own postage brands and stamps for some time, afterwards; some of these issues have since become collectors' items.
==After independence==
After independence, the postal service remained much as it had been under Spanish rule. Following the Treaty of Pilar in 1821 the new government placed the postal service under a commission, appointed Manuel Joaquín de Albarracín as commissioner, hired Marcos Prudant as Postmaster General and provided him with an assistant. The first new edict established the postal uniform of a jacket with yellow buttons and a stiff collar. Boots were to be black, and the employee should wear a metal escutcheon on his hat displaying the new county's coat of arms. The edict further decreed that each post rider was to have a horn which should blown a half-mile or so (ten cuadra) before arriving at the town center, and again just before departure.〔
In 1826 Juan Manuel de Luca was appointed Postmaster General by the Rivadavia government, under the oversight of an enlarged commission.〔 Despite the demise of that government, and the civil war, the postal service was only minorly inconvenienced and Luca remained at his post until 1858 when he resigned because of his age and health.〔 It was under Luca that detailed regulations were developed; concessions, vehicles, routes, and frequencies set.〔
Gervasio Posadas managed the post from 1858 to 1874; he introduced revised rates, post office mailboxes, established the stamp program, and in 1860 he inaugurated the first telegraph service.〔

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